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Evidence Considered: Table of Contents

This is the table of contents of Evidence Considered: A Response to Evidence for God (available here). This will show the context of the sample chapters as well as the flow of the overall book.

From the introduction to Evidence Considered:

One of the benefits of writing is the opportunity to read and learn. A book that grapples with these issues is the collection of essays edited by William Dembski and Michael Licona entitled Evidence for God: 50 Arguments for Faith from the Bible, History, Philosophy, and Science. I am open to evidence, and so I read this book closely and with fascination. I admire the quest for truth and the broad scope of apologetics that it covers: it took me on a journey deep into areas that I had not considered before. However, as I worked through it, reading and learning as I went, I realized that I wanted to bring my own thinking to bear on these questions. I do not seek to belittle or attack the writers, nor to critique Evidence for God, but rather to test their arguments and findings.

The first 50 chapters mirror the structure of Evidence for God, responding to their arguments one by one. The last three chapters are additional essays to cover a few other arguments. In each case, I am attempting to show why the argument does not persuade me of the existence of God.